Stuff You Should Know - SYSK's 12 Days of Christmas… Toys: What Makes a Must-Have Christmas Toy?
Episode Date: December 12, 2025Ever since Cabbage Patch Kids came along in 1983, there’s been an annual holiday frenzy around one particular toy – the must-have Christmas toy of the year. But what makes a toy a must-hav...e toy? Josh and Chuck investigate (and kick off the holidays).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Happy holidays, everybody.
This is Chuck here with one of our episodes for our stuff you should know, 12 days of Christmas toys, playlist.
Now we decided to put this together.
Thought it would be a fun little holiday idea to kind of gather up some of our toy-centric episodes
and release them this December all packaged up.
So here we are with, I think this is the first one, either the first of the first of
the second one on the list, and the episode title is What Makes a Must Have Christmas Toy?
If you want to know, listen in and find out. Happy holidays, everybody.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles Wichuk Brian over there,
There's Jerry over there.
This is stuff you should know.
Early Christmas a dish.
Yeah, we're kicking it off early.
Like the rest of the retail world.
Do you, yeah, man.
This year you could find Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas stuff
in stores at the same time.
Like, it was just the most normal thing in the world.
Yeah.
But you don't follow me on Twitter, and you should.
I'm not on Twitter.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
You should get on Twitter to follow me.
No, thank you.
But at 7.30 in the morning on November 1st, the day after Halloween, I tweeted, Merry Christmas.
I got a lot of hate back for it.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
What do you do on Twitter?
Do you just poke people like that?
Yeah, pretty much.
Just troll.
I got you.
Yeah.
Well, that was my plug for Twitter.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Here we go.
So, let's see.
Back in 1983, Chuck, you were...
Twelve.
Okay, I was seven.
You didn't have a cabbage patch kid, did you?
Well, there's a story there, if you really want to know.
I think you've told it before, but let's have it.
Well, we bought my sister, one of the very first little people, is what they were called,
before they were cabbage patch kids.
That's right.
In Helen, Georgia, when they were handmade by Xavier Roberts,
who I recently learned stole that idea.
from a woman
and took it as his own
and made millions of dollars
off of her idea.
Yeah.
I mean, I wanted to,
maybe we'll do
a short stuff about that.
I wanted to do a full-length episode.
But we, I mean,
we definitely talked about
that because I think we have talked
about like must-have toys
of the past
and maybe last years
or the year before
is Christmas edition.
Yeah, and we had,
she got this doll,
its name was Chuck,
which was kind of funny
because that's my name.
That's so funny.
And it was a big deal.
I think it was like
the number
70-something or 80-something made, and now it's worth a lot of money.
Does she still have it?
Uh-huh.
Oh, that's great.
And we'll finish with Cabbage Patch Kids, and then I'll take issue with you.
So go ahead.
Okay, I know what you're going to take issue with.
Oh, I don't know if you do know.
But go ahead.
So let me, let me start.
All right.
So back in 1983, Cabbage Patch Kids were like the must-have toy of the Christmas season.
For sure.
And from what I can tell, they were the first must-have Christmas toy ever.
Now, that's not to say there weren't extraordinarily popular toys around Christmas time before 1983.
Star Wars, very famously offered their early bird certificate package, which was basically an empty box that said at some point in the future you will get Star Wars figures instead of this empty box.
One of the great, great marketing gems of all time.
Yeah.
So that was a thing.
All the way back in 1952, Mr. Potato Head was a hot toy that year.
Robert the Robot was a hot toy in 1954.
And when you say hot toys, it's tough to overstate that.
Like, Robert the Robot had T-shirts in the 50s.
I didn't even know people wore T-shirts in the 50s.
Yeah.
He was in a movie.
Like, these were big deal toys.
But my premise is this.
This is my thesis, okay?
And this is my own, so I'll take the hit if it's wrong.
Sure.
But that in just the same way that there were hit movies like The Godfather or like Ben Hur.
Before Jaws came along, there wasn't such a thing as the summer blockbuster until Jaws came along and made the summer blockbuster a thing.
There wasn't such a thing as the must-have toy of Christmas until.
the Cabbage Patch Kid came along
and made that a thing.
Okay.
So what issue are you going to take?
I can't take it any longer.
You're driving me crazy.
Well, I don't think it was Cabbage Patch Kids
that was the must have toy.
The first must have toy.
That's what I take issue with.
What was the first?
Well, I don't know.
I mean, I'm just speaking
from my own lifespan,
and I definitely think Star Wars counts
because if you can sell an empty box
to a kid for Christmas,
then that's pretty strong position
as a must-have thing.
And by the way, if you're listening,
the reason they sold empty boxes
is because they didn't know
Star Wars was going to be a big thing,
so Kenner didn't have as many of these made
in the run-up to the film release
pre-Christmas.
So they got caught with their pants down,
and they realized that there was a big demand,
a huge demand.
Okay.
They sold like 40 million of these?
No.
40 million boxes?
I'm trying to...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
I don't know, 40 million Star Wars toys.
Okay.
At that, inside of a year.
So, okay, yeah, I'm not surprised to hear that.
And did you know that you can even buy these empty box kits on eBay now?
Oh, yeah, I'm sure.
I saw one listed for 1,500 bucks.
I'm not at all surprised.
And then, just very quickly, I also want to point out that the biggest most in-demand toy of my young life was the Atari Pac-Man cartridge.
Oh, boy.
That was in 1982.
Okay.
That sold 7 million cartridges.
Okay, great, great.
The numbers, don't lie.
That's a big, big number.
7 million, 40 million.
You can toss big numbers out all day long.
But let me ask you this.
Okay.
For that empty box of Star Wars,
for that Atari Pac-Man cartridge,
did a woman have her leg broken
because a crowd trying to get their hands on those things turned violent?
Or, before you answer,
in addition to that,
did a department store manager in Charleston, Westford,
Virginia, have to arm himself with a baseball bat to defend himself from his very customers
who are trying to get to the Star Wars empty box or the Atari cartridge.
I would guess that the answer is no.
Well, I think human behaviors have changed over the years.
I don't know.
From 1982 to 1983?
Well, I guarantee I could find one violent incident about the Atari cartridge.
I'll bet you couldn't.
Well, you know, there wasn't then because they met the demand.
Okay, so that's a big part of it too, right?
So there have been, well, let's just move on from this.
The Cabbage Patch Kids, if not were the first, which they were.
Did you have one?
Yeah, yeah, Weber Dino.
You had a Cabbage Patch Kid?
Yeah, I ended up taking his head off and giving him a Mohawk as I grew older.
Because, and not to be too, like, gender binary here,
but I didn't know a lot of boys that wanted the Cabbage Patch Kid.
What?
I've always broken the mold, Chuck.
Well, sure. No, I mean, there's nothing wrong with it.
I grew up with William wants a doll on free-to-be-you-and-me, so I get it.
But that's why I just don't know.
I think a must-have Christmas toy would be one that everybody wants.
Yeah, as far as I knew, everybody wanted a cabbage-patch kid.
All right.
We'll just put this one to bed.
Okay, like a cabbage-patch kid with a Mohawk.
That you adopted.
Yep.
You didn't buy it.
Right.
Well, that was a big thing.
Like, there was some hallmarks to the idea of a must-have toy
that were surrounding Cabbage Patch Kids.
Violence is one.
Right.
There was a lot of buzz that was picked up by the media.
And one of the ways that that was generated was by, I think,
Calico, who owned Cabbage Patch Kids at the time,
sent these dolls directly to reporters.
That was a big one.
And the fact that there was not enough supply to meet the demand.
Right.
These things kind of came together to make Cabbage Patch Kids a must-have Christmas toy.
And this has been carried on as a tradition ever since then, ever since that very, very first time in 1983 with Cabbage Patch Kids.
There were Nintendo's that dominated back in 1988, 1989, and 1990.
Three years in a row, Nintendo had three different products that were like the must-have Christmas toy.
Oh, yeah.
That first game console, huge.
Oh, dude.
The Game Boy, huger, it felt like.
and then of course in 1990
possibly the best
gaming system of all time
if you look at just relative
to the time
the Super Nintendo console
I don't know man
N64 was pretty great with GoldenE
Oh God, N64 was great
Yeah
With GoldenE
I mean like it would have been
you know fine on its own
but the fact that GoldenE
existed was the thing that made N64
to me
That game blew my mind
Yeah it was great
Especially the Battle Royale
where you could play your friends.
Oh, man, that was fun.
Yeah, we called it Hunt and Chase.
Yeah.
I used to get so mad in those.
Like, that's the only time I ever got mad playing video games,
because I don't do that thing where you play online
and you can, you know, you can exact revenge on people.
So I did not take it well when my friend snuck up behind me
and shot me in the head.
Right.
Yeah, that was always a bummer.
What about Tickle Meomo?
That was a big one, thanks to Rosie O'Donnell.
I was a little old for that.
Oh, really?
That was in my mid-20s.
Oh, I had one.
Oh, yeah?
Well, you were late high school.
Not really.
Yeah, this was 1996.
This was post-high school even.
But this was such a craze that there was that characteristic violence where a Walmart employee was trampled while he was trying to restock the display late at night, I believe.
But he had a pulled hamstring injuries to his back, his jaw, his knee, broken rib, a concussion.
And it continues on.
Like, I haven't read about any violence from Hatchamels.
From 2016 to 2018, they were the, if not one of the top, must have toys of the year.
I hate those things.
Hatchamels?
How come?
Because you have to put in a dish or a bowl that you eat out of, and you have to leave it there and leave it there and leave it there and then it hatches into a garbage toy.
So my experience is that they're pretty good.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
So you like your hatchamol?
Yeah.
Why are you talking?
Is it like animatronic?
Huh?
Is it anemotronic?
I'm talking about hatchamels, yeah.
So, okay, so I don't know anything about the dish.
I just, my experience is from my niece and I don't remember any dish.
Oh, wait, this isn't the, are we talking about two different things?
This is a thing you put in water?
No, no, no, no.
And it hatches from an egg.
If you put in water, you'll electrocute yourself when you touch it.
Okay, maybe I'm thinking about something else.
This is like an animatronic thing that hatches from an egg, but like,
you have to, like, teach it and train it and raise it and, like, give it attention and everything.
It's a bit like the Tamagochi, but like an animatronic pet.
Oh, I got you.
Now, I'm thinking of the thing that you, it's an egg that you put in water, and after a few days, it hatches into a garbage toy.
Yeah, no, that's not this.
Gotcha.
Hatchamels are much different.
Okay.
So there is this tradition of a must-have Christmas toy, and you can find all you want about them every year,
because they're everywhere all the time, and the media reports on this kind of stuff, and they're on TV.
and there's ads and there's like social media stuff now.
But there's like a really big question that doesn't have a lot of press associated with it
and certainly no studies or anything that I could find.
But there's a question, Chuck, like how does a toy become a must-have Christmas toy?
Well, let's take a break and we'll get to the bottom of it right after this.
Hey, Harry Potter fans. Huge news. Harry Potter, the full cast audio editions are all being
released on Audible on a monthly basis, and Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone is already out.
You have never experienced the wizarding world like this before. They've taken it to another level.
The cast is perfect. Hugh Lorry is Dumbledore, Matthew McFaddy and is Voldemort, Riz Ahmed as Snape,
and Cush Jumbo as the narrator. And there are too many others to name. There's
even a brand new musical score.
And the sound design, you'll feel like you're right there.
Footsteps echoing down the halls of Hogwarts, a golden snitch flying past your ear.
The Hogwarts Express rumbling out of platform 9 and 3 quarters, and it's all in Dolby
Atmos, which makes the wizardry even more magical.
Plus, these are the unabridged versions, even more awesomeness.
As I mentioned, the first book is out, and the next installments in the series will be
released every month until all seven are out.
Go to audible.ca slash HP1 and start listening now.
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That was quite a setup, huh?
I think so.
So back in the day when you were shopping for Christmas,
if you were a kid or a parent, it didn't matter.
You knew exactly what to do?
You knew exactly how to do it.
There was no frills.
No, nothing. It was all just holiday joy and the goodness of the Christmas holiday season.
That's right. That is correct. And you learned what you wanted, if you were a kid from two things. Saturday morning cartoon commercials and whatever your catalog was. The Sears Wishbook is certainly one.
Yeah. Service merchandise catalog was another big one for us.
Yeah, there's a Montgomery Awards catalog.
Yeah, of course.
And you put this together, and you introduce me to a website called Wishbook Web
that might as well be called timesuck.com.
Yeah, it's pretty great, isn't it?
Because someone has gone through and scanned, is it just Sears wishbooks?
No, no, it's Sears, J.C. Penny, and Montgomery Ward.
Right. And then I think there's the occasional, what store is that here or there?
Right. They have scanned these entire wishbooks up to 1996.
Which everyone knows is the cutoff date for nostalgia.
That's right. From the earliest days of 1933, and boy, let me tell you, dude, and I know you know this because you've done it.
If you go through and spend a few minutes clicking through these things in the years where you were like six to 12, waves of nostalgia.
nostalgia wash over you, like John Hodgman would succumb to these waves.
Yeah, I know.
It's amazing.
I remember some specific pictures.
I remember the, I mean, the NFL section alone brought tears to my eyes, and I forgot how
much they hyped football back then.
You just can't stop crying.
It was crazy.
The clothes, the alarm clocks, the clock radios, the tech section, it was just, it was off
the charts for me.
looking through this, I almost did nothing else today.
Yeah, I know.
It is.
Wishbook Web is pretty awesome.
Like, somebody went through and scanned every single page of these several hundred page each catalogs for decades worth of catalogs.
It is, it is God's work.
And just to get laughs by, like, seeing the two four-year-olds posing in bathrobes.
It's really, really funny.
Right.
One of them's got, like, a pipe that blows bubbles.
Oh, my God.
This is just amazing.
What a great website.
So Wishbook Web is kind of preserved how you used to figure out what you wanted for Christmas,
which was you'd go through these wishbooks or these catalogs or whatever,
and then you'd tell your parents, you'd dog ear them, maybe drop some hints.
It was the correct way.
The 21st Century has kind of an updated version of that,
but it still kind of follows the same general contours, right,
where there are lists still and like catalogs,
But now it's not just department stores that have, like, the market cornered on them.
Like, that's actually kind of gone away.
It's very tough to find a department store catalog.
I believe Myers still does that.
I think they're kind of like a Midwestern target.
Oh, really?
Yeah, and they have a toy catalog that they put out still, I believe, to this year.
Well, now you get the restoration hardware, Christmas catalog.
Right, or IKEA.
Yeah.
But there's lists everywhere, and it seems like every retailer has one
or all the major retailers have one.
And depending on where it's coming from,
some are more trustworthy or above the boards
or objective than others
when saying, like, these are the must-have toys.
Right.
Like, on one end of the spectrum,
you have, like, third-party websites
and publications and organizations
like the spruce or toy insider
or toys, tots, pets, and more.
And they actually evaluate the toys
when they make their lists.
Yeah, I mean, these, it's just different now.
And I don't think it's nostalgia, like,
thinking things were better back then.
But it was, it seemed easier and better
to let a kid sift through a catalog
and pick out stuff, then I guess what are you supposed to do today?
Like, sit down with your kid at one of these websites
and look at the top 20 hot toys and say, what do you want?
Like, I don't know how it works these days.
I don't know.
Maybe instead of, like, dog-earing the pages,
is you send your parents links.
I'm sure you do, actually.
You know?
Yeah.
But, I mean, if your kids are too young to be on the Internet,
I'm not sure how to do it.
Because I could hand my four-year-old a catalog
and say, pick out some stuff, it would be great.
Right.
But I'm not going to say, hey, just log on to the spruce
and go scroll down and see you find something you like.
Right.
Stay out of their parents' section.
I mean, what do you do?
I know.
You literally have a kid, Chuck.
What do you do?
I don't know.
I mean, we just buy things
that we think she might like.
So there's like a whole world out there
of like lists and websites
that show toys and stuff
that she's unaware of?
Oh, sure.
Oh, wow.
She's got a big surprise ahead of her.
I guess so.
That's great.
I'm excited for her, actually.
Yeah, but I mean,
you definitely feel like
you're sort of stabbing in the dark
as to like, I mean,
a parent can go through
and look at those lists.
but, you know, kill me.
Well, a lot of people are excited about that kind of thing.
They're like, good.
This is, yeah, I don't have to, like, go to the store and stand there and be like,
what are we getting here?
You could go to some website or USA Today or the Today Show
or whoever is partnering with some of these trusted sites like Toys Tots,
Pets and More, or Toy Insider.
And, like, they kind of take a lot of the guesswork out of you.
They're basically saying these are what experts are saying,
your kid is going to want.
If you go buy this, you will score a home run with your kid.
Yeah, I think my problem is I don't know what is bought and what is real reviews.
Because as you have dug up, and I didn't even know this, of course, they do this.
If you go on Amazon, you know, you can spend $2 million as a retailer to be on their, you know, on their top list or whatever.
So, okay, yes.
What I saw, though, was that they, you spend that money to not.
nominate them to nominate your toy for their consideration to include on the list.
Just for a nomination?
I don't know how the process works, but yeah, I saw, like the headlines say, you pay $2 million for a slot,
but if you read the finer print and say you pay $2 million for them to even consider it.
And then I guess I don't know how they curate it.
They actually kind of keep a closed lid on it.
But it generated like $120 million in revenue for Amazon just to be on their list of hot toy.
for the year.
Walmart, they charge 10 grand a month per toy to be on their buyer's picks toy list.
Mm-hmm.
And like you point out here, Walmart starts their list in August, and you've got to wonder,
is that because they're making 10 grand a pop off of the stuff?
Per month.
Yeah.
Yeah, they released theirs in late August, before Labor Day even.
And like, this isn't like, hey, we think these toys are going to be hot this year.
Here's the hot list of holiday toys.
And Target released theirs at the beginning of September.
I think Bullseye is the name of their mascot, dog mascot.
It's Buzz McKenzie, basically.
Yeah, bully Bullseye.
And I couldn't see if they charge for placement
or how they compile it or anything like that,
which actually makes me suspect that they don't
because there's plenty of ink about Amazon and Walmart's lists
and how they charge for them.
And the fact that there's not one for Target
makes me think either they're really keeping a lid on it,
or else they actually don't charge for that.
But so there's kind of two lists where if you're a parent,
you need to ask, yeah, you need to ask dogs people and cat people.
That's right.
You need to ask, where is this list coming from?
And if it's coming from a third-party site,
go look up the third-party site,
and they will tell you in their like About Us section
how they determine what toys or what.
And if you really want to get that information, that's fine.
But even if Amazon or Walmart or even if Target charges for
placement on their lists, just the very fact that those things are on their list is going to make
them among the hot toys of the season. So it's like a self-fulfilling or self-paying prophecy.
Yeah, I mean, I guess any time you look up something on a major retailer website, those first few
things are sponsored, and they say sponsored in little letters.
Oh, sometimes they don't.
Oh, really?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I mean, sometimes it's kind of hard to discern whether or not you're looking at the real
top thing or the sponsored thing.
Right. And I think like with the gift list in particular, I don't believe that they say that
these are sponsored. I think it's just like, here's the hot list according to Amazon.
Well, let's talk a bit about marketing in general around the holidays.
You know, it's a science in a way, and they have found out through science that happy people
buy more. You are, not everyone's happy around the holidays, but they definitely, as marketers,
play on the idea that you are happier around the holidays.
And so you should be in the buying spirit.
Definitely when you're talking about kids, that is the case.
They pummel children with ads.
There was one study here.
University of Hertfordshire counted 100 ads in a three-hour Saturday morning kids slot.
Christmas time.
A hundred.
A hundred in a three-hour slot.
That's a lot of ads.
It is.
And then, of course, you know,
Children are on more than one screen these days,
so they're also getting ads on, you know,
when they're watching YouTube or whatever,
or just on kids' websites.
There's ads everywhere.
I can't remember what episode we really kind of dove into that,
advertising their children.
Oh, man.
I think it was about advertising for children.
Like, that was the sole, you know, goal.
So the idea is that just the holiday season itself
puts most of us in a pretty good mood.
And advertisers say, oh, well, if we release ads that are holiday themed, we'll be able to kind of tap into that goodwill and good mood and make you nostalgic or feel good about things.
And so by doing that, we'll be able to kind of tie our brand or our product to that holiday sensation.
And you'll say, oh, I do want to go buy that because it makes me think of being a kid at Christmas time.
that's really basic stuff
I mean like that's everywhere
you can't get away from that in the holiday season
and there's not even necessarily anything wrong with it
it's just that's just basic
marketing and advertising 101
when it comes to holiday advertising
yeah and the other thing we mentioned earlier
in terms of marketing
and this is also marketing 101
is about scarcity
if you have a toy
that there's a limited amount of
that is when you're going to find people trampling each other
to get there because people are motivated by fear.
And if you know that a toy is a must have
and there aren't many of them
and they're going on sale at a certain time,
it is frightening what some parents might do
to secure that toy.
Yes. So this is, finally, we've reached the key ingredient, right?
You've got lists of toys that are promoted and advertised
and maybe even show up with their own articles in the media.
Then you have the fact that we're already kind of primed,
to buy because it's the holiday season, we're in a good mood.
But when you add that scarcity marketing, it ramps it up to a totally different level.
And when you have a must-have toy that is hard to find, like you said, people will do
very crazy, violent, mean stuff to get it.
And there's a lot of reasons why, even if you're not willing to, like, throw an elbow
to get a toy, you might still be willing to camp out at 4 a.m., waiting for, you know, a 24-hour
retailer to restock their supply of this so you can buy it. That's unusual behavior. And the reason
why it all comes down to scarcity marketing, the idea that we have a fear of missing out, a fear of
social embarrassment, a fear of our kids not loving us as much as they could had we gotten
them this toy. And that all of these things, the scarcity marketing is the real driver that
kind of hyper-charges must-have toy frenzy.
Yeah, and it's not just toys.
You've seen everything from, you make a great point about Pappy Van Winkle, Whiskey.
Oh, I should say that's from Marketing Land.
A guy named Jacob Bodgarde wrote an article on Marketing Land where he cited that and
the Disney Vault is really good examples.
Yeah, Disney Vault.
It's another great one.
They were very famous for not just saying, like, here's all the movies we've ever made that
you can buy on VHS.
all in one big package.
They would release them
every now and then
and you knew
you had a limited time
to get them
and I wasn't really
hip to all this
but my dad
and his wife
were way into the Disney stuff
and they were
adamant about
making sure they filled
out the entire collection
and really kept up
with when they were
going to be released
and what a big deal
that was.
Yeah, that was a big one
and Bodgarde
makes the point
like by making them
limited
and available
also only for a limited time with years, sometimes a decade in between times when you can buy
these things. It creates this like frenzy to go buy them. And it also makes them like a treasured part
of that person's home. You know what I mean? Yeah. And you can also fake out the public a little bit
and mislead them on the scarcity. Like you might have a lot of the stuff and just kind of lead the
public to believe like, no, you better go get one right now because they may not be around next week.
Yeah, the people who made Hatchamels, Spin Master, Hatchamels were really hard to find in, I think, 2016, 17, and 18.
And Spin Master was basically accused of purposefully using scarcity marketing.
And for their part, they said, hey, we were totally caught off guard three years in a row by the, you know, the popularity of Hatchamels.
And other people were like, that's BS.
You can totally ramp up production pretty fast.
Another must-have toy was fingerlings.
Remember them from like last year or the year before?
No. They were like little monkeys or sloths or dragons or whatever
that would hang on to your finger,
and they were little finger-sized robots that would like blink and blow kisses
and do all sorts of cute stuff.
They weren't. They were cute instead of uncanny because they weren't kind of cartoonish.
Just the words finger-sized robots together sound terrifying to me.
They would cut your throat while you slept.
But they were caught unaware, even though they really tried hard to make them hit through social media.
They were still surprised when it actually happened.
But they ramped up production.
They brought a third factory in China online.
They went from shipping via cargo boat to air transport to get supplies here faster.
And they were able to ramp up and meet demand pretty quickly.
So the idea that hatchamels just couldn't possibly do that really smelled to a lot of people like they were purposefully using scary.
marketing. Yeah, scarcity. I mean, it's an interesting concept because you see it everywhere.
You know, they have restaurants that, you know, here in Atlanta, Holman and Finch had the Holman
and Finch burger that like one day a week, like we'll sell a hundred of them starting at 10 p.m.
on this night. Yeah. And then everyone's like, oh, my God, what is in that burger?
People would line up around the block. Yeah. Or this is a nice little tidbit here that you dug up
about supermarket experiments.
Yeah, that's from an article from Market Watch
by Mark Elwood, he found that one.
It's amazing.
Even putting up a sign for soup
that says limit 12 per person
will make people to be like,
oh, I should probably buy 12 of these
for whatever reason.
Campbell's might stop making their chicken noodle soup.
Right.
Or in this case, it was soup that was on sale,
so who knows what the price is going to go back to, you know?
Well, that's true.
So one of the other things that scarcity produces is this idea that there are haves and have-nots, right?
So if the idea that you're fearful of missing out or fearful of your kid not loving you isn't enough,
there's a whole other cognitive bias of being a have-not, of being left out in the cold,
which I guess is a fear of missing out.
But there's also the benefit of being a have where if you're talking about like a fingerling,
which is a $15 toy,
but people were crazy for those things
either last year or the year before.
And like just about anybody can afford this $15 toy.
So even if you're like a have-not throughout the year,
you're down on your luck,
maybe you're unemployed or you're underemployed,
things just aren't going your way,
you could still camp out
and wait for that late-night restocking of fingerlings
and get your kid that toy.
That's right.
And for that time,
you are a half.
Yeah.
And maybe even somebody
with a much higher
social status
than you couldn't get
that fingerling,
which makes it all the more sweet.
And then let's also not forget,
like we said,
this is during the holiday season,
so emotions like count extra,
so to be a half
when you're normally not
during the holiday season
because you got a must-have toy
is exponentially increased.
Yeah, it's a big deal
because it's,
even if it's just
emotionally equal
for a brief period of time
it can be a big deal
for somebody.
I'd say we take
our final break here
and then we come back
and talk about
the worst people
toy flippers
right after this.
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All right. So I set up the worst people, our toy flippers. Obviously, there's a lot of really, really bad people in the world.
And I'm being somewhat hyperbolic.
But I do think
Somewhat
The idea of
Buying
Targeting and buying a lot of
Must Have toys
to sell later for profit on eBay
Makes you a pretty rotten person
Yeah
I'm gonna go ahead and lay that judgment down
Some people do
I reserve judgment for the ones
Who do it professionally
I think if you are a
Person who is just trying to augment
Your own like holiday expenses
and you are foreseeing a lack of supply ahead of time,
I say more power to you.
Yeah, I'm not into it.
I feel the same way about ticket scalpers.
Yeah.
It's exactly, I mean, it's the same thing, basically.
Yeah, it's buying up a bunch of things.
Sometimes, and this is completely gross and awful, using bots.
Yeah, that's the pits.
to especially for concert tickets like when bots buy up all the best concert tickets especially our tickets
yeah exactly i don't think anybody uses bots on ours well probably not but um actually stuff you should know is is
we've seen very few bad uh examples of people trying to overcharge for a sold-out show more times than not
it's a fellow listener that's like hey just come along you can sit next to me for face value or i'll even give it to you
Yeah, that happens quite a bit.
And, yeah, I mean, there's only been a couple where somebody's like, you know, a million dollars.
And of course they didn't sell it.
No.
But, yeah, we haven't run into that.
Mostly the problem is from ticket outlets, just charging ridiculous fees on top of our ticket price.
Well, that makes us mad.
And you all should know we don't have control over that.
No.
We're the Eddie Vedder of podcasting.
Right.
But if you ever find yourself in a situation where you got shut out of a stuff you should know show
and your option is to not go
or to pay like a ridiculous amount
just send us an email
we'll put you on the list
Oh God Chuck
Wow you just opened some floodgates
I mean there's very few list spots
So it's not like you know
Right now you just started a must have toy frenzy
for the list
Look what you've done
Oh let's get back to bots
These bots are so savvy
That they can
They can buy out
They can have hundreds of credit card numbers
on file, because sometimes they'll have like a limit
to how many things you can buy.
They are all these shortcuts in ways to bypass
all of these safeguards put into effect,
including CAPTCHAs.
They will hire foreign workers to sit around
and type in the CAPTCHAs to get through security.
Which, I mean, if there is anything
that says holiday spirit more than that,
I can't think of it.
But these bots can sometimes buy out something
in the second that it goes up online
for a regular human being to say,
oh, like, all right, they've released the tickets
or the doll.
Mm-hmm.
Gone.
Right. Because they'll, so what they'll do
is they'll go on to, like, retail websites
and figure out what the unique idea is
for the product that they're looking for.
That's the real art.
It'll start, right.
It'll start monitoring that page
because people who build these pages
will put them out
and just won't, you know,
kind of open the curtain for hours.
of time. So the bot will have the page targeted and just keep refreshing it hundreds of times
a second until that sale goes live and they will have ordered scores of these things or dozens
or hundreds, whatever, however many it can, before you can even, if you're sitting there
refreshing your browser, between the time it takes to refresh your page, they will have
wiped the place out using these bots. And then if you're truly sophisticated, you probably
have another set of bots who take your inventory and then put it up for sale at some
exorbitant price on Amazon or eBay or Craigslist or something like that.
Yeah, the worst people.
So, like, you don't even have to do anything.
You just stick your bots on it.
Yeah, and I stand by it, even for the enterprising person who, I just, I don't know,
I have a big problem with someone making money off of someone else's misfortune
to not have been able to get that themselves.
I don't think it makes someone scrappy or enterprising at all.
Hey, man, that's fine.
Yeah, I'll die on this hill.
Okay, that's fine.
So if you are one of those people that Chuck hates and you want to be enterprising,
there is a article written by Lisa Smith.
It's on Investopedia.
And it's called The Guide to Reselling Toys at Christmas for Extra Money.
Oh, God.
Which is very innocuous.
And there's some tips, actually, that make a lot of sense if you want to do this.
Do you want to go over them, or are you going to remain mute?
You can go over them.
So you could talk to parents if you wanted to, right, Chuck?
Yeah, that's right, Josh, good idea.
Because they know what kids want.
You can talk to kids themselves, which makes sense.
I mean, just go right to the horse's mouth.
I've already said the same thing, Josh.
You can talk to Santa.
I thought this was pretty enterprising.
Like, imagine if you are trying, so what you're trying to do here is to identify what toy you want to buy as early ahead of time
as possible so that you can have identified the hot toy of the season and bought them
before the demand really struck.
So you talk to Mall Santas, hang out in stores, you can talk to cashiers, stock people,
all that stuff, because not only will they know what toy you need to look out for, they'll
know when these new supplies are coming in, maybe slip them a Starbucks card or something like
that with $10 on it as a thank you, but be sure to deduct that from your bottom line.
Sure.
Bribery.
Deduct that bribery.
Right.
And then you can actually hang out in chat rooms.
There's entire websites that are dedicated to this kind of stuff that are, you know, that say, like, here's the toys we're looking for.
I spotted some at this, you know, Walmart or whatever.
This stock guy said that Walmart replenishes them on Thursdays at 10.
There's a lot of stuff you can do if you really wanted to put the legwork in.
Great.
Or you could put all that energy.
into doing something worthwhile.
Right.
I know what you're talking about.
This is the, like,
the Michael Larson approach to the holidays.
The man who got no whammies on Pressure Luck?
Oh, I had no problem with him.
Okay.
This is virtually the same thing.
No, it's not.
It's somebody gaming the system.
Because Michael Larson wasn't,
there wasn't some father who didn't have much money
that, you know, overpaid for a doll
to make his little girl happy at Christmas time,
Michael Arsson didn't do that.
Right.
He would have, though.
I'm sure of it.
Oh, goodness.
So that's what you can do
if you want to flip toys
and ruin the holidays
as far as Chuck's concerned.
That's right.
And that is a big part of the competition
of people who will go buy out stocks.
Like you're not really facing them nationwide
unless you're talking about
people who release bots onto websites or whatever.
But they are out there.
there, and they do actually create competition and help drive that frenzy even further. Because
remember, what's behind must have toys is scarcity marketing. And if there are people out there
actively contributing to the scarcity, that's a big deal. Here's what I want to hear from.
I want to hear from some women listeners who, let's say you go on a date from a dating app,
and you sit down across from your date, and you're like, what do you do? And he goes, I'm a toy flipper.
And she's like, what's that?
He goes, you know, around Christmas time, I go out and I buy like tons of toys that I know little kids really, really want, and then I mark them up so I can make a lot of money off their parents who may not be able to afford it.
Right.
And just tell me how that date goes from there.
Yeah.
Does it have to be a man and a woman?
Can it just be anybody?
It can be anybody, but, you know, I think the guy that does this is the guy that I just did that voice for.
Who's apparently from Jersey?
Sure.
They're all from New Jersey.
Okay.
And I love New Jersey.
So I feel like we've learned a lot here.
Yeah.
We've talked about, you know, how a toy becomes a must-have toy of a season.
Usually it has to do with some combination of advertising and buzz marketing as long as as well as scarcity.
The flippers get involved.
I think, and I want to back this up, Chuck, there's not a lot of stuff out there on this.
This all had to be brought together.
of one of those rare stuff you should know theses about what makes a must have toy must have
toy but i think it's i think it holds up should we talk about some of the the big toys of this year
yes so those lists that are out there this helps me actually we put a bunch of well that's the point
that's we're trying to help you and all of the toy flippers out there so actually this is for all the
parents this will help you get a drop on the toy flippers because i guarantee there are very few
toy flippers listening to stuff you should know.
No, because we have good people in our audience.
So all those lists that are out there now, we kind of compiled and cross-referenced them.
A number of them lists from Target, toys, tots, pets, and more.
That's just one.
Amazon, the Today Show, Toy Insider, the spruce, crazy coupon lady who had a post about toy flipping,
Walmart, and New York Magazine.
all of those lists we looked at
and we found ones that appeared
on at least a couple if not more
and one of them the first one appeared
on basically every single list that we saw
yeah this one the bloom doll
B-L-U-M-E
nothing to do with the rest of development
but it is
this is something that my daughter
might like apparently this is another
thing you add water to
and it blooms
but this is I don't think it hatches from an egg
I think this doll just
like grows like a chia pet might.
Kind of, and like the hair that grows is,
I can't tell it looks like some sort of foam or styrofoam or something,
but it takes different shapes like pineapples or cakes or something like that.
So cute.
And there's, I think, 22 different versions.
Yeah.
Okay.
Give me 10,000 of them and I'll walk it up.
Yeah.
But they're also, yeah, they're super affordable too.
So they're probably going to be the hot must-have Christmas toy of the year as Bloom dolls.
Hatchamol's are still around.
Yeah, and there's one that's from How to Train Your Dragon, Toothless Dragon, the baby dragon.
They have a hatchimal version of him.
What else?
Surely Barbie's on the list.
Yeah, Barbie has a dream plane.
Whoa.
Which I saw on a couple of lists where, yeah, it's a plane for Barbie.
There's like a snack cart and everything.
Okay.
Comes to the dog that I guess lives on the plane.
Great.
There's also LOL surprise.
Have you heard of that?
No.
I hadn't heard of it either until we started researching this, but they're like a whole brand.
And a lot of these, including Bloom Dolls and LOL Surprise, they tap into like this whole trend of unboxing.
Do you remember when we talked about unboxing on YouTube where, like, people open toys?
Yeah, because our good friend, Joe Randazzo, did his Lego Man unboxing videos that were still, to me, one of the funniest things I've ever seen.
Yes.
great plug by the way
but they still
do that
they're still unboxing
it's a huge trend
and that's worked its way
into toys
so LOL surprise
is kind of based on that
and there's like a whole line of dolls
but they're like into like
DJ stuff and fashion
and all that
but they also have surprise
and there's also a kid
named Ryan's World
I don't think that's his last name
but that's his YouTube channel
and guarantee we talked
about Ryan's World in that
unboxing toys episode
but he's
He's got all sorts of toys that are out
where you just don't know what you're getting
when you open the thing.
It's just surprise, unboxing.
Weird subgenre on YouTube of unboxing.
I remember we talked about the one
where the lady's hands would just play with things.
Yeah, it was the, yeah.
Remember she was like, Peppa Pig?
Yeah, it's so interesting.
I'd say you the one on the list, though, that I like,
that I usually look at the toys that I'm like,
would I like to play this with my daughter?
because that's important.
I can't be bored out of my mind, you know.
Oh, yeah, good point.
And this Lego Make Your Own Movie kit looks pretty cool to me.
Yeah, I was kind of heartened to see that on a couple of lists, you know, because it's like this is...
A little stop-motion movies you can make.
Yeah, it's thoughtful, it's inventive.
I love it.
Yeah, where it's, yeah, they have a bunch of different stages and backgrounds and props, including a banana.
It's great.
So you learn how to make, are you going to get her that?
I might.
I think you should.
You want to come over to make a movie?
Any time, buddy.
All right.
Can we make a flaming hoop out of a coat hanger and do things with that too?
Sure.
Okay.
And then the other one was the Fisher Price linkumoles, which are super cute, including the smooth move sloth.
Hey, I'm down with Fisher Price.
Yeah, and sloths are huge, huge right now.
Yeah, do you remember Playmobile?
Playmobile.
Remember they were like the vaguely.
European kind of
action people
but there was nothing
like violent or military
about them
they would explore
or
I probably recognize them
I definitely know that name
you've seen it a million times
right when you see it
I'll look it up
and show it to you later
but you'll see it and be like
yeah of course
I wait I see him right there
sure yeah there I was kind of
a Fisher Price kid but
you know we still have some of that stuff
that our daughter plays with
that we had when we were kids, like the barn and the boat.
And, you know, it holds up.
Definitely does hold up.
You got anything else?
Got nothing else.
You're going to go buy a bunch of toys and flip them?
I got nothing else except for 20,000 hatchimals in my garage.
Man, here's the other thing, though, Chuck.
Like, you're taking a risk because you've got to predict what the must-have toy is.
And if you guessed wrong, you got 20,000 hatchimoles that nobody wants.
Boy, I'd love to see that happen in real life.
I guarantee it happens, so just keep an ear out.
All right.
If you want to know more about the must-have toys,
there's basically nothing you can't know that we haven't already told you.
So just, I guess, go get your kids some Christmas toys.
That's right.
Is that a good way to sign off?
That's great.
Okay.
Since I said, is this a good way to sign off, it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this from a teacher.
We always like to shout out our teachers.
and their students.
Hey guys, just sending one of what I'm sure
is among infinite thank yous that you receive.
As a teacher who regularly references knowledge,
I gain from listening to your show in my class,
my students unwittingly,
and I are eternally grateful for your work.
They give a hearty laugh
whenever I steal your character's tuk-tuk,
the wise proto-homo sapien,
and erg, the folly-prone genetic defect
to elucidate points
about the evolution of early humans.
I knew you wouldn't mind my poaching that.
That's what you think, John.
You'll be hearing from our lawyers, John.
You're the toy flipper of teachers.
Just kidding.
The reason I'm writing is to say,
I think you should not be discouraged
by any listener mail you received
telling you to keep your opinions to yourself.
My favorite episodes are the ones
where either or both of you
have such strong feelings about the subject
that you can't help but go on a rant.
Maybe it's just because I agree with every rant,
but I feel like it is important to take a stand on issues that matter to you
and admit that you're human beings with a real stake in the game.
Thanks again, I'll keep listening as long as you keep podcasting.
That is from John Lubushkin, so thank you, Mr. Lubushkin,
and hello to your students, Mr. Lubushkin's class.
Yeah, hi, guys.
You've got a cool teacher.
Yeah, he does sound pretty cool.
He's doing God's work teaching the next generation.
That's right.
I hope he doesn't work in a public school because he's going to be like, you can't say God's work.
If you want to get in touch with us like Mr. Lubushkin did, or if you're a toy flipper who has an argument against Chuck's argument, we want to hear from you.
Bring it.
You can go on to Stuff You Should Know.com and check out our social links.
And you can also send us an email to Stuff Podcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
Podcasts from IHeartRadio, visit the IHeartRadio app.
Apple Podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
I know he has a reputation, but it's going to catch up to him.
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Took us under his wing and showed us the game, as they call it.
When Larry's killed, Gabe Must Untangle a dangerous past, one that could destroy everything he thought he knew.
Listen to the Brothers Ortiz on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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I'm the director of the men's clinic at UCLA,
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